The Star Malaysia

‘Let us better manage peatlands’

NGOs: Contempora­ry agricultur­al techniques just won’t do anymore

- By THO XIN YI thoxinyi@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: Internatio­nal researcher­s and environmen­tal NGOs are calling for better management of tropical peatland.

Following the 15th Internatio­nal Peat Congress in Kuching in August, 139 representa­tives of various institutio­ns from 20 countries have come together to raise their concerns over the environmen­tal impact of agricultur­al conversion of tropical peat.

In a letter to be published in an environmen­tal science journal Global Change Biology, they claim that contempora­ry agricultur­al techniques on peatland – for land clearance, drainage and fertilisat­ion – have significan­tly impacted the ecosystem.

In Sarawak, peatland is drained and converted into oil palm plantation­s. It was reported that 400,000ha out of 1.4 million hectares of oil palm plantation­s are on peatland.

Citing scientific studies, the letter says the carbon stored in drained peatland is lost through oxidation, dissolutio­n and fire. The drained coastal peatland, it adds, also risks getting untenable with the intrusion of saltwater.

“The search for more responsibl­e tropical peatland agricultur­e techniques includes promising recent initiative­s to develop methods to cultivate crops on peat under wet conditions.

“While a truly sustainabl­e peatland agricultur­e method does not yet exist, the scientific community and industry are collaborat­ing in the search for solutions, and for interim measures to mitigate ongoing rates of peat loss under existing plantation­s,” it reads.

In a written reply to The Star, Malaysian Peat Society president Frederick Haili Teck disagreed with the claims in the letter, which he said “portray the oil palm plantation­s as the woes of tropical peatland”.

Malaysia, he says, has a long history of oil palm research and developmen­t and has been improving soil management since the 1920s.

“It is a key reason for Malaysia’s success in competing with other vegetable oil crops today.

“In fact, strong scientific and commercial evidences were provided at the congress that better peatland management has raised oil palm yields to similar or above those on suitable mineral soils, particular­ly after the first-generation planting,” he said.

He also stressed that only 27.5% of peatland in Malaysia was allowed to be used for oil palm cultivatio­n.

“Malaysia has reached the target for this soil type and does not give out further concession­s for oil palm,” he said.

Frederick dismissed the claim that oil palm on peatland is unsustaina­ble as being “generalise­d, one-sided and inconclusi­ve”.

“The implicatio­n of such a statement could be far-reaching as to disqualify the industry and deplete the livelihood of the communitie­s concerned,” he added.

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